![ontime supply ontime supply](https://www.exactlly.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/Time-of-Supply-for-Goods-on-Reverse-Charge-under-GST.png)
It therefore makes common sense to monitor and optimize the OTIF process on a multi-party platform, not an enterprise platform. Multi-Party Platformįirst of all, OTIF is a process that involves multiple parties: a retailer, a supplier and a carrier (with the potential addition of a 3PL). On-Time In-Full Control Tower for Grocery (and Others) Retailers and suppliers can deploy a Control Tower that will (i) capture all the OTIF-related multi-party transactions on a single platform, (2) trigger the real-time alerts to monitor and resolve issues and (3) generate the analytics to calculate OT and IF for all shipments using common data and common metrics. There is a simple solution to the problem. This makes it very difficult to (a) have a holistic shared view of OTIF performance across retailer, supplier and carriers, (b) acquire insights on the root causes when deliveries do not meet with OTIF requirements and (c) be able to systematically attribute the responsibility of the issues to either the retailer, the supplier or the carrier. It does not promote a real time collaborative process to resolve the issues.
![ontime supply ontime supply](https://www.bleepstatic.com/content/hl-images/2016/11/18/UK-Flag.jpg)
![ontime supply ontime supply](https://blogs.3ds.com/northamerica/wp-content/uploads/sites/4/2017/08/GettyImages-492546162-1.jpg)
This post has already been read 7622 times!Īfter analyzing data for 1.75 million retail DC appointments on One Network’s Real Time Value Network, it became clear… the lack of On-Time In-Full (OTIF) performance was costing grocery retailers and their suppliers big time.